4-Course Wild Food Feast & Native Beverages

Share...

May 11th – 21st

This post focuses on my event at Polly’s Paladar supper club, where The Living Wild Project prepared a four-course meal and beverages from wild, seasonal edibles and then served the meal to 50 people. See the 19th below for the menu. It was challenging to pull together but with help from my fellow gatherers and expert chef Ryan Dutillieul, we served a delicious wild food feast and enjoyed an inspiring evening. Grayson Coney, Tsi-Akim Maidu Cultural Director, shared traditional songs on his Elderberry Clapper as an especially moving contribution to our deep connection to the landscape we inhabit.

Wild Lilac Blossoms (Ceanothus integerrimus)

11 Wild Lilac Wake Up Tea: Gather the flowers and dry for poison oak remedy. Cover with boiling water and steep overnight any or all of the following: wild lilac flowers, oak bark, manzanita leaves, walnut leaves. Gather the leaves and dry for later use as a green tea substitute. Steep for only 3 minutes and then strain out leaves.

13 Douglas Fir Tips: The bright green tips are fading at lower elevations so I’m going higher to collect. The branches are good anytime of year as a tea, but the tips in the spring have the highest content of vitamin C.

14 Douglas Fir Tip Sorbet: experimenting with Bob at Treats in Nevada City on the best recipe. Using sugar and not honey or agave, seems to work best since it doesn’t overpower the flavor of the fir. We also steeped the tips and doubled the quantity of tips.

15 Mosquito Spray Experimentation. I went outside with my kids during dusk, at prime mosquito time, to test the effectiveness of my new bug spray. It needs either two applications or more coyote mint. Steeping mugwort, bay and coyote mint overnight seems to be the most effective combination. Wild Yarrow Ale tasting at Daniel’s to prepare for the Polly’s Paladar.

Bush Monkeyflower (Mimulus aurantiacus)

16 Monkeyflower: I tasted the greens which are reportedly a good salad substitute but they seem too chewy and oily for me!

17 Wild Sweet Pea Tips—delicious fresh

18 Harvesting Locust Blossoms—gather the sweetest ones where you see the bees!

Menu Notes: Gluten-free Oak nuts (acorns) are high in Vitamin A, Folate and Omega-6 and Manzanita berries, gathered in the summer, are ground into sweet, gluten-free flour. Elderberries are gathered in the summer and simmered with honey to make the syrup.

Menu Notes: Cattail hearts, the inner stalks gathered in the spring, provide a good source of beta carotene, niacin, potassium and Vitamin C. Golden Cattail Pollen is high in minerals and protein, gathered by gently shaking the flower heads into a paper bag. Locust is a non-native tree that blooms in the spring. Gather the white, vanilla-like blossoms and enjoy raw and on salads and soups. The muffins are prepared with local Manzanita berries and Elderberries, which are each 3x higher in antioxidants than Blueberries and Pomegranates. The muffins are gluten-free, sweetener-free and antioxidant rich.

Third Course – Main

Roasted California Quail with Wild Currants & Morel Mushroom Gravy

Pine Nut Heritage Fritters

Wild Sweet Pea Tips with Manzanita Vinaigrette

Notes: California Quail were hunted by the local Maidu and provided a key part of the indigenous diet of this region. Highly desirable Morel mushrooms are harvested in the spring. Pine Nuts have been a significant source of food in this landscape for thousands of years. They contain a 30% protein and are harvested from the local Gray Pine in the fall. Wild Sweet Peas are an abundant, non-native plant and the Vinaigrette is made from the berries of the Manzanita.

Fourth Course – Dessert

California Bay Ice Cream, Douglas Fir Sorbet & Oak Nut Marzipan

California Bay Ice Cream & Spring Douglas Fir Sorbet

Chocolate Oak Nut Marzipan

Tasting of White Locust Blossom Vermouth

California Bay is an evergreen tree, with a strongly aromatic leaf, which grows near local creeks and the Yuba River. Douglas Fir Tip Sorbet offers refreshing and sweet Vitamin C and Oak Nut Marzipan is gluten-free with oak nuts, and almonds, dipped into organic dark chocolate. Fresh, Spring Locust Blossoms are soaked in white vermouth for a week to create this digestive beverage.